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I've not shot this one before, but I thought it might be similar to the Iris... nope. The reflection nebula in the Iris is brighter, the dust around it is brighter (more like LBN468) and it's much higher in the sky this time of year. NGC1333 started at about 20 degrees when I started imaging and climbed over the 5 hours or so of imaging to a nice and high72 degrees. It seems like this one needs a long winter evening from 45 to 45 across the Meridian for 10 hours or something. Perhaps a project for another year... Even still, for the first time shooting it and giving it 4.5 hours, I'm pleased with both the image and the education.
Scope: Vixen ED103S with WO Flat 4 0.8x FR/FF
Mount: Orion Atlas EQ-G with GoTo
Guiding: Meade DSI Pro and PHD Guiding
Guide Scope: ATM 60mm f/4.1 Achromat
Camera: Canon EOS 1000D (Modified / Peltier Cooled to 34F)
Special Settings: None
ISO: 800
Exposure: 4 hours 30 minutes (54 x 300s)
Processing Software: Acquired in Nebulosity with High Dither, Calibration and Stacking in Deep Sky Stacker, Levels/Curves/Enhancements in Photoshop
Support Files: 40 flats, 40 bias, 12 darks
Tags:
Albums: Oregon Star Party 2011
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